Were the Wars Wise? Were They Worth It?

Guest Post by Pat Buchanan

Were the Wars Wise? Were They Worth It?

While the service and sacrifice were always honorable and often heroic, never to be forgotten, were the wars these soldiers were sent to fight and die in wise? Were they necessary?

Through the long Memorial Day weekend, anyone who read the newspapers or watched television could not miss or be unmoved by it: Story after story after story of the fallen, of those who had given the “last full measure of devotion” to their country.

Heart-rending is an apt description of those stories; and searing are the videos of those who survived and returned home without arms or legs.

But the stories could not help but bring questions to mind.

While the service and sacrifice were always honorable and often heroic, never to be forgotten, were the wars these soldiers were sent to fight and die in wise? Were they necessary?

What became of the causes for which these Americans were sent to fight in the new century, with thousands to die and tens of thousands to come home with permanent wounds?

And what became of the causes for which they were sent to fight?

The longest war of this new century, the longest in our history, the defining “endless war” or “forever war” was Afghanistan.

In 2001, we sent an army halfway around the world to exact retribution on al-Qaida for 9/11, an attack that rivaled Pearl Harbor in the numbers of dead and wounded Americans.

Because al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden had been given sanctuary by the Taliban in Kabul, who refused to give him up, we invaded, overthrew that Islamist regime and cleansed Tora Bora of al-Qaida.

Mission accomplished. But then the mission changed.

In control of a land that had seen off British and Soviet imperialists, we hubristically set about establishing a democracy and sent hundreds of thousands of Americans to hold off the rebel resistance for two decades while we went about nation-building.

We did not succeed. All U.S. troops are to be gone by the 20th anniversary of 9/11. And the Taliban we ousted has never been closer to recapturing power in Kabul.

Today’s issue: How do we save the Afghans who allied with us in this war, so that they do not face the terrible vengeance of a victorious Taliban.

The second American war of this century was the invasion and occupation of Iraq, to strip its dictator, Saddam Hussein, of weapons of mass destruction with which he intended to attack the United States.

Begun in 2003, the war has lasted 18 years. No WMD were ever found. Most U.S. troops have come and gone. And today, the Baghdad regime rules at the sufferance of Shiite militia who look to Tehran for guidance and support.

Afghanistan and Iraq cost us 7,000 dead and 40,000 wounded.

Were they necessary wars? Were they wise? Were they worth it?

In the second decade of this century, we intervened in Syria to back the “good rebels” seeking to overthrow Bashar Assad and became the indispensable ally in Saudi Arabia’s murderous air war to stop the Houthi rebels from consolidating power in Yemen.

In both Syria and Yemen, hundreds of thousands of soldiers and civilians have been wounded, killed, uprooted or driven into exile. Both countries are listed among the humanitarian catastrophes of the 21st century.

Having helped to inflict so much damage on those countries, did we succeed in our missions?

Today, after six years of fighting, the Houthi still control the Yemeni capital of Sanaa, and Assad just won a fourth term as president with 95% of the vote.

In 2011, President Barack Obama ordered U.S. air attacks on Col. Moammar Gadhafi’s forces in Libya, beginning a NATO intervention that would lead to his overthrow and lynching.

In 2020, however, the future of Libya was not being decided by the European Union or U.S. but fought over by proxy forces supported and supplied by Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia. And Barack Obama had conceded that the worst mistake of his presidency was not to plan for the aftermath of his 2011 decision to topple the Libyan dictator.

Again, the men and women sent to the Middle East to fight these wars did their duty and deserve the gratitude of their countrymen that they received this Memorial Day weekend.

But where is the accounting from those who sent them to fight, bleed and die in what turned out to be unwinnable wars — or, at the least, wars they were not given the requisite weapons or forces to win?

What makes these questions of importance, and not only to historians, is that the cry of the hawk may be heard again in the land.

We hear calls to confront Iran before the mullahs build an atom bomb, and to challenge Putin and arm Ukraine to retake Crimea and push Russia out of the Donbass. We hear talk of the American Navy contesting Beijing’s claims in the East and South China Seas, including to Taiwan.

The stories of Memorial Day should make us think long and hard before we launch any more unnecessary, unwise, or unwinnable wars.

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18 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
June 4, 2021 7:56 am

Great. TWO articles by Buchanan. Looks like today is gonna be shittier than I expected.

Were the wars wise??? Ohmigawd, what a deep and wise question! What a thinker you are Pat!! How lucky we plebes are to have you around to kick-start Deep Thoughts.

Ghost
Ghost
  Stucky
June 4, 2021 8:06 am

This title was so boring I would not have even opened the thing if you’d not commented.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kxbW9Lsi9c

And, for those who prefer pictures to lyrics…

How is your mother? I continue to mention you to You-Know-Who, if there is a You-Know-Who. Like all humans experience, doubts creep in during moments of great weakness (whereforearthouthensilence)?

Silence.

There are three rather large boulders misplaced in our pasture around an oak tree that must be three hundred years old. One of the boulders appears to have something chiseled into it, but it is covered in lichens and hardened fungus from many decades past and I am reluctant to pour any chemicals on what may be the burial place of Civil War soldiers lost during the Battle of Pilot Knob, traveling home. (We believe there is a very old campground along the creek on our property.)

Since the boulders are atop a hillock rather than at bottom, I doubt they were placed there by the torrential flash floods which occur in this area during the spring, but were placed there intentionally to mark the spot. The oak tree preceded the event since one of the stones, the one with the markings covered in lichens and moss?, well it is snuggled against the roots of the tree in such a way the trunk has grown around it, hugging it close. Since I guestimate the tree to be in the 250+ year range, I’m thinking they very well may be soldier’s graves, placed reverently into the ground and marked by their comrades traveling back to some southern village to tell a bereaved mother or wife their loved ones had fallen to the Yanks at Pilot Knob.

And that makes me sad when I pass by that lovely old tree sheltering those three boulders until the Kingdom comes or It never does.

Stucky
Stucky
  Ghost
June 4, 2021 8:51 am

She’s in terrible shape. Lots of pain. Hates life. Is miserable 24x7x365. Yet, she defies Father Time. It’s not her who needs prayers. It’s ME!!

Ghost
Ghost
  Stucky
June 4, 2021 9:00 am

I know that.

And, I know the type. When Nick’s father was in a nursing home, the woman across the hall would cry out “help me… I need help” but if you went in she just wanted to gripe and complain so I would do that for a while just to give my poor father-in-law some rest from her constant calls for help, which were increasingly ignored by irritated and overworked staff.

Her daughter was really nice, but didn’t clue in to the fact that the constant complaining her mother made to her while she visited for an hour or so was just a drop in the bucket compared to what her mother could dish out all damn day.

So, while I continued to be patient with that old bat for Poppa’s sake, when he died and she was hollering for help over there, I went in to ask her to be quiet because Poppa had died and she spit in my face!!! I wiped off my face and said “Oh my God! You really are just a mean and selfish old woman, aren’t you?”

I never felt bad about that. Still don’t.

flash
flash
  Stucky
June 4, 2021 9:21 am

Wiser and deeper than 99.99 % . PB was the first to say what no other obsequious shit-eating cur politician ever dared. The US gained nothing from WWI and WWII and in fact it cost us our sovereignty and eventually, our Republic.

August
August
  flash
June 4, 2021 9:34 am

A great read. One can argue about specifics, but there is no question that European-derived civilization destroyed itself.

With the possible exception of the “backward” Slavs and Hispanics.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
June 4, 2021 8:05 am

We have an all volunteer military. The truth about why we fight, who pulls the strings, and how much of a failure our foreign policy is, has been clear since Korea. Is the problem those who start the wars for the benefit of others or those who continue to volunteer to do their bidding?

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 4, 2021 8:11 am

Middle east – NO!
Vietnam – NO!
Korea – Maybe
World War II – Probably
World War I – No

August
August
  Anonymous
June 4, 2021 12:01 pm

Face facts: some people serve their fellow citizens by husbanding and growing inherited wealth, while others serve by getting maimed or killed in foreign wars.

Is this a great country, or what?

Crawfisher
Crawfisher
June 4, 2021 8:43 am

Gotta ask, after 8 years of GW Bush, why did our ‘elites’ keep us in these hell hole wars?
The Obama admin had 8 years, and started the draw down in 2012/13. Then Trump had 4 years.
I look back and realize no one had the balls to face the brutal facts and make the right decision.

Ghost
Ghost
  Crawfisher
June 4, 2021 8:48 am

It is the Military-Industrial-Pharmaceutical Complex’s money laundering system: Neverending War interspersed with Disease and Famine.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
June 4, 2021 8:48 am

They hate us for our freedoms.

Now put on your mask and maintain your distance.

Ghost
Ghost
  hardscrabble farmer
June 4, 2021 9:02 am

And get your damn shot.

HAL p
HAL p
June 4, 2021 9:20 am

Hell no they weren’t worth it.. And we lost thousands of our young men and women , while the people that sent these young kids to war got rich.

I think the only good thing that we can say that come about this, is now we have hundreds of thousands of combat vets that can be ready when the Communists finally make their big move on America.

ReluctantWarrior
ReluctantWarrior
June 4, 2021 9:26 am

NO!

CCRider
CCRider
June 4, 2021 9:47 am

“Because al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden had been given sanctuary by the Taliban in Kabul, who refused to give him up, we invaded”

Bullshit. The Taliban asked for the evidence to support him being handed over which is a standard practice in international law and baby bush didn’t comply because there wasn’t any.

Rusty Pipes
Rusty Pipes
  CCRider
June 4, 2021 11:31 am

Everyone who voted for that village idiot “W!” should be lined up in front of a firing squad. The moron malefactor of inherited wealth destroyed our country even before that scumbag Barry had a chance.

August
August
  Rusty Pipes
June 4, 2021 1:00 pm

In retrospect, even Jeb! may have been a better president.

/s